Transportation
Safety Compliance Manager - Transportation
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A Safety Compliance Manager in transportation owns the programs that keep a fleet and its drivers on the right side of DOT and FMCSA regulations—driver qualification files, hours-of-service monitoring, drug and alcohol testing, vehicle inspection records, and accident reporting. They also build the safety culture that reduces preventable incidents before the regulations have to get involved.
Role at a glance
- Typical education
- Bachelor's degree in occupational safety, transportation management, or related field preferred
- Typical experience
- 5-8 years
- Key certifications
- Certified Director of Safety (CDS), Certified Safety Professional (CSP), OSHA 30-hour
- Top employer types
- Carriers, shippers, transit agencies, third-party logistics providers
- Growth outlook
- Stable demand driven by increasing regulatory complexity and rising insurance premiums.
- AI impact (through 2030)
- Augmentation — AI-driven ELD and dashcam data provide more granular safety insights, expanding the role's scope from mere documentation to proactive incident prevention and coaching.
Duties and responsibilities
- Manage driver qualification file programs—maintain current MVRs, medical cards, CDL verifications, and required endorsements for all drivers
- Administer the DOT drug and alcohol testing program including pre-employment, random, post-accident, and reasonable suspicion testing
- Monitor hours-of-service compliance through ELD data review, flagging violations and coordinating driver counseling
- Conduct and review accident and incident investigations, completing required reports and leading root-cause analysis
- Maintain the company's FMCSA Safety Measurement System (SMS) scores, identifying CSA violations and implementing corrective actions
- Develop and deliver driver safety training programs covering defensive driving, cargo securement, HazMat procedures, and regulatory compliance
- Audit vehicle inspection records, DVIR logs, and maintenance files to ensure compliance with Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations
- Manage OSHA recordkeeping, workers' compensation reporting, and injury investigation programs for transportation operations
- Prepare the company for DOT compliance reviews and FMCSA audits; lead all interactions with regulatory agency representatives
- Benchmark safety performance metrics across fleets and sites, presenting trends and recommendations to operations leadership
Overview
A Safety Compliance Manager in transportation is the person whose job it is to make sure every driver, every vehicle, and every mile of operation meets federal and state regulations—and that the company has the documentation to prove it when someone asks.
The regulatory landscape they navigate is dense. The FMCSA's Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSR) fill hundreds of pages and cover everything from the thickness of brake linings to how many hours a driver can operate before mandatory rest. OSHA's general industry standards apply to the terminals, loading docks, and maintenance bays where drivers and mechanics work. State DOT regulations add another layer in every operating jurisdiction. A safety manager's first job is knowing what applies to their operation—and their second job is implementing the programs that ensure compliance.
But regulatory compliance is the floor, not the ceiling. The safety managers who add the most organizational value are the ones who use safety data to prevent incidents, not just document them. When ELD data shows a cluster of HOS violations on a specific route, that's a coaching opportunity. When dashcam events show a pattern of following-distance problems among new drivers, that's a training program need. When accident investigation reveals a blind intersection that has produced three incidents in two years, that's an infrastructure change or routing modification.
The job also requires steady communication across organizational levels. Frontline drivers need to trust the safety manager enough to report near-misses honestly—which means the safety manager needs to be accessible and perceived as supportive, not punitive. Operations managers need to understand the regulatory risk of the decisions they're making. And senior leadership needs clear visibility into safety performance and the financial implications of lagging indicators.
At carriers with multiple terminals or operating locations, safety managers often travel between sites conducting audits, leading training, and investigating significant incidents. The role is rarely desk-bound.
Qualifications
Education:
- Bachelor's degree in occupational safety, transportation management, or related field preferred
- Associate degree plus extensive transportation compliance experience is a common alternative
- Military police, Army transportation, or logistics officer backgrounds transfer well to this role
Certifications:
- Certified Director of Safety (CDS) — NATMI, the standard credential for motor carrier safety management
- Certified Safety Professional (CSP) — BCSP, valuable for the OSHA-side of the role
- Associate Safety Professional (ASP) as a path to CSP
- DOT Designated Employer Representative (DER) qualification for drug and alcohol program administration
- OSHA 30-hour General Industry certification
Regulatory knowledge:
- 49 CFR Parts 380–397 (Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations) in depth
- 49 CFR Parts 382 and 391 (drug and alcohol testing; driver qualifications)
- OSHA 29 CFR 1910 (general industry) and 1926 (construction where applicable)
- FMCSA SMS system: BASICs scoring methodology and intervention processes
- Hazmat regulations: 49 CFR Parts 171–180 for carriers transporting regulated materials
Technical skills:
- ELD platform administration (Samsara, Motive, KeepTruckin) and violation review workflows
- Driver qualification file management software (HireRight, Tenstreet, or TMS-integrated DQF modules)
- OSHA recordkeeping: 300, 300A, and 301 forms and electronic submission
- CSA score monitoring and FMCSA DataQs challenge process
Experience benchmarks:
- 5–8 years in transportation, with at least 3 years in a safety or compliance-focused role
- Direct experience managing a DOT drug and alcohol program as DER
- Demonstrated experience preparing for or managing a DOT compliance review
Career outlook
Safety Compliance Managers in transportation are in demand at carriers, shippers, transit agencies, and third-party logistics providers of all sizes. FMCSA regulations apply to any commercial motor vehicle operation—a company with 5 trucks needs compliance management as much as one with 500, and the person doing that work needs real expertise.
Regulatory complexity has increased over the past decade, and there is no sign of that trend reversing. The ELD mandate, hours-of-service rule revisions, drug and alcohol clearinghouse requirements, speed limiter proposals, and ongoing CSA program updates all create more compliance work than the previous regulatory environment required. Companies that once had a safety coordinator are increasingly realizing they need a safety manager.
Insurance is one of the strongest hiring drivers in 2026. Nuclear verdicts against carriers in commercial vehicle accident litigation have driven commercial auto insurance premiums sharply higher for fleets with poor safety records. Carriers are investing in safety programs not only to meet regulatory requirements but to maintain insurable operations. Safety managers who can demonstrate measurable improvement in CSA scores and accident rates have clear financial value they can articulate to leadership.
The career path from Safety Compliance Manager typically leads to Director of Safety, VP of Safety and Compliance, or Chief Safety Officer at large carriers and transit agencies. Some experienced safety managers move into consulting, assisting smaller carriers with compliance program development, DOT audit preparation, and CSA score improvement.
Compensation for the role reflects its technical complexity and regulatory exposure. Errors in safety compliance—a failed drug test that wasn't acted on, a driver operating with an expired medical card, a vehicle maintenance falsification that led to an accident—can result in federal intervention, substantial fines, and litigation exposure. Companies pay for expertise that prevents those outcomes.
Sample cover letter
Dear Hiring Manager,
I'm applying for the Safety Compliance Manager position at [Company]. I've spent seven years in transportation safety, currently as Safety Manager for [Company]'s [Region] fleet—220 power units, 280 drivers, and operations across [X] states.
When I took this role the company's CSA scores in the Hours of Service BASIC were in the 65th percentile—high enough to be on FMCSA's radar for intervention. I spent the first three months going back through two years of ELD data to understand the violation patterns. Most were 11-hour daily violations on a specific set of lanes where dispatch was scheduling runs that couldn't be completed within HOS limits without adjustment. I worked with operations to reconfigure those runs, implemented a pre-dispatch HOS review process, and got the score into the 30th percentile within 12 months.
On the drug and alcohol side, I serve as our Designated Employer Representative and manage our contract with [C/TPA]. I've handled five confirmed positive situations and three return-to-duty programs. I know the 49 CFR Part 382 requirements in detail and I've prepared the company for two DOT compliance reviews—both closed without citations.
I'm pursuing my CDS certification and expect to complete it by [Date]. I hold an OSHA 30-hour General Industry certification and I'm familiar with both the regulatory and practical sides of terminal safety management.
What I'm looking for is a company where safety is treated as a strategic function, not just an administrative one. From the conversations I've had with people at [Company], that description fits.
[Your Name]
Frequently asked questions
- What certifications are most valuable for a Transportation Safety Compliance Manager?
- The Certified Director of Safety (CDS) from the North American Transportation Management Institute (NATMI) is the most recognized credential specifically for motor carrier safety management. The Certified Safety Professional (CSP) from BCSP and the Associate Safety Professional (ASP) are highly regarded for the OSHA and general safety aspects of the role. CDL-A holders who move into safety management often find their driving background as credible as any certification when working with drivers.
- What is a CSA score and why does it matter?
- The Compliance, Safety, Accountability (CSA) program is FMCSA's data-driven safety measurement system that scores carriers across seven BASICs: unsafe driving, crash indicator, hours-of-service compliance, vehicle maintenance, controlled substances/alcohol, hazardous materials compliance, and driver fitness. High CSA scores can trigger FMCSA interventions and investigations, affect insurance premiums, and—if publicly disclosed—influence shipper carrier selection decisions. Safety managers own the company's scores.
- How does a DOT drug and alcohol program administrator differ from a third-party administrator?
- Most carriers contract with a Consortium/Third-Party Administrator (C/TPA) to manage the administrative logistics of random pool selection, collection site coordination, and MRO communication. The internal safety manager is the Designated Employer Representative (DER)—the person who receives confirmed positive results, makes return-to-duty decisions, and ensures the employer's obligations under 49 CFR Part 382 are met. The DER role cannot be outsourced.
- What is the difference between OSHA compliance and DOT compliance in this role?
- DOT/FMCSA compliance covers the commercial motor vehicle operation specifically—driver qualifications, hours of service, vehicle maintenance, cargo securement, drug testing, and accident reporting. OSHA compliance covers the workplace broadly—terminal safety, loading dock hazards, forklift operations, personal protective equipment, injury recordkeeping (OSHA 300 log), and investigation of non-driving workplace injuries. Safety managers in transportation typically manage both, and the two regulatory frameworks overlap in areas like hazardous materials handling.
- How is technology changing safety compliance management in transportation?
- ELD mandates eliminated paper logbook falsification as a primary HOS compliance concern, but they created a new layer of data management—reviewing ELD violations, counseling drivers on specific events, and using the data proactively to prevent HOS fatigue. AI-based dashcam systems now generate driver behavior events (hard braking, distracted driving, following distance) at scale, enabling more data-driven coaching than was possible with periodic ride-alongs. Safety managers are increasingly data analysts as well as regulatory administrators.
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